Care For Pittosporum: Japanese Pittosporum Information & Growing

Japanese Pittosporum (Pittosporum tobira) is a useful ornamental plant for hedges, border plantings, as a specimen or in containers. It has attractive leaves that enhance many other plant textures and it is very tolerant of a range of conditions. Care for Pittosporum is negligible, and the plants thrive in many locations as long as they are not grown below USDA zone 8 or above zone 11.

Pittosporum Information

Pittosporum plants are moderate to slow growing bushes with whorled leaves of either glossy green or variegated white. The plants produce fragrant, creamy white flowers at the ends of the stems, set in clusters. At maturity, the plants may get 12 feet high with an 18 foot spread.

The thick foliage makes the plant an excellent screen en masse, but it can also be an interesting single or multi-stemmed stand alone tree. For coastal dwellers, and important piece of Pittosporum information is the plant’s excellent salt tolerance.

How to Grow Pittosporum

This is a very versatile plant and thrives equally well in either shade or sun. Propagation, or how to grow Pittosporum, is through semi-hardwood cuttings in summer. Place the cutting in a half and half mixture of peat and perlite. Keep the pot lightly moist and soon you will have another Pittosporum baby to enjoy.

The plant does produce a small fruit with a bright red seed, but the seeds are not easily sprouted and are often not viable.

Japanese Pittosporum Care

The tolerance of this plant is nearly legendary. In addition to its ambivalence regarding lighting, it can also grow on almost any soil. It is drought resistant, but the plant is most beautiful when it does receive regular irrigation.

Use mulch around the root zone in hot areas, and plant in an eastern exposure at the highest hardiness zones to prevent sunscald.

The most important aspect of good Japanese Pittosporum care is to ensure the planting site has adequate drainage. While the plant grows best when it has regular water, it doesn’t tolerate wet feet and is also susceptible to a host of fungal diseases. Water at the root zone to prevent foliar disease and fertilize in spring with an all purpose, slow release plant food.

Trimming Pittosporums

Pittosporum plants are very tolerant of pruning. Trimming Pittosporums helps shape them and keep them within a desirable size. They may be headed back for sizing or even severely cut back for rejuvenation.

As a hedge, you won’t get a smooth appearance because you need to cut under the whorled leaves and they are staggered. However, pruning below the terminal leaf arrangement produces a natural, soft looking hedge.

Annual pruning as part of the care of Pittosporum may reduce the scented flowers. To encourage blooms, prune right after flowering.

Remove the lower branches if you wish to have a small tree appearance. You can keep the plant in a small size for many years by consistently trimming Pittosporums. However, a better approach if you want a smaller plant is to purchase ‘MoJo’ a small plant that gets only 22 inches high or a dwarf variety like ‘Wheeler’s Dwarf’.